Imagine this: You decide it’s time to make a concerted effort to lose weight. You
start exercising regularly and embark on a healthy eating plan. The time comes
to check in on your progress, so you step on the scale for the moment of truth.
You haven’t lost
any weight.
What do you do? Continue with the exercise and healthy eating
plan? Throw in the towel, and go back to what you were doing before? Start
restricting your eating even more as an effort to make weight loss happen
faster?
These are all completely normal and reasonable reactions to a
lack of success on the scale. Weight loss, maintenance or gain can be tricky to
navigate. Put more plainly: The scale can be tricky to navigate.
Weight fluctuations are common because your weight is determined
by a variety of factors. These
include but are not limited to how hydrated you are, what you recently ate,
your bathroom habits, the climate and your exercise routine. A few pounds of
weight fluctuation here or there are usually not a result of fat gain but a
result of your body doing exactly what it needs to do to regulate its
physiological functions. So, how often should you weigh yourself? Whether your
goal is maintenance, loss or gain, let’s talk about the scale.
The very first question you need to ask yourself is: “Will
weighing myself (daily, weekly, periodically, etc.) help me or harm me?” Since there’s no magic answer for
how often to weigh yourself, figuring out what is helpful and motivating for
you as an individual is how you decide.
DAILY
WEIGH-INS
Many people find
weighing in daily provides a sense of accountability and is helpful for having
a good idea of where they are with their progress. For many, it helps to keep
progress on track. If you’re able to look at the overall trend and not stress
about the fluctuations, then by all means, weigh yourself daily.
Does a 0.4-pound weight gain sour your mood? Or, are you
absolutely elated to see that you’re down 1 pound? If the daily weigh-ins
powerfully affect your mood and behavior, then you might want to reconsider how
often you weigh yourself. The number on the scale should not have the power to
dictate your mood, the events of the day or your overall quality of life — it’s
just a number.
WEEKLY
WEIGH-INS
Weighing weekly can have its advantages — it allows you to track
progress while still having six whole days to not focus on your weight.
For best results, pick a consistent day each week, and weigh
yourself in the morning. Look for trends, but don’t get caught up in the
minutiae. Recognize that it will take a few weeks to get a picture of where the
trend is heading. This can be a good tool to help you feel accountable without
making you ride the daily emotional roller coaster that is (or can be) the
scale.
OCCASIONAL
WEIGH-INS
Some people opt for the occasional weight check-in. People may
do this at home or rely on the scale at the gym or doctor’s office to get an
idea of where they are. People who opt for the occasional weigh-in often have
alternative ways of identifying weight shifts, like the way their clothes fit
or how strong they feel while exercising.
NEVER
WEIGHING
There are many people out there who smash their scale and never
look back. Some people find it helpful to focus on how they feel in their
clothes, the balance of their meals and snacks and how they perform with their
exercise rather than focusing on the number. This can be a valid way to
approach health — there’s much
more to health than a number on
the scale!
If you are weighing yourself multiple times per day, stop! With
rare exceptions, you should not weigh yourself more than once per day.
Obsessing over a number on the scale can turn into a very problematic pattern
that can disturb the peace and happiness in your life. If you decide to weigh
yourself, the scale should be a tool that helps you, not harms you.
Overall,
ask yourself about what is most helpful for you.
For some, daily weigh-ins are the best route. For others, weighing less often
is better for overall health. Each of us has different ways of experiencing
things and inviting motivation and positivity into our lives. Find what works
for you and stick to it!
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